We’ve all been there, safe in the collective nerd-aura of a good bunch of gamers, reeling off details of particularly arduous boss fights, game mechanics that can get in the way of something or even the admittance that someone doesn’t like a popular title.

However, nothing sticks out quite like having to admit you’ve not played a certain landmark release. That sort of thing derails the conversation-train like Godzilla necking an entire carriage for an afternoon snack, and once the damage is done there’s no turning back – especially when what’s admitted is someone not playing an illustrious fanbase-establisher like Half-Life.

Oof, that hurts doesn’t it?

Suddenly there’s that mash of reactionary statements clouding your mind, and in your heart you know whoever you’re talking to is missing out on a truly special experience. It’s the same in the film
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Cameron Stewart provides the artwork for the comic, which is produced by Dark Horse Comics.

Dark Horse Comics released a statement about the graphic novel, saying: "Some imaginary friends never go away… Ten years after starting Project Mayhem, he lives a mundane life. A kid, a wife, pills to keep his destiny at bay.

"But it won't last long; the wife has seen to that. The time has come…Rize or Die."

Cameron Stewart provides the artwork for the comic, which is produced by Dark Horse Comics.

Dark Horse Comics released a statement about the graphic novel, saying: "Some imaginary friends never go away… Ten years after starting Project Mayhem, he lives a mundane life. A kid, a wife, pills to keep his destiny at bay.

"But it won't last long; the wife has seen to that. The time has come…Rize or Die."

A “Fight Club” sequel is coming to comic book stores May 27. Writer Chuck Palahniuk, artist Cameron Stewart and Dark Horse Comics will reveal what happens next for Tyler Durden and the anonymous narrator when the 10-issue graphic novel, “Fight Club 2,” is released.
Palahniuk and Dark Horse Comics released a 6-page glimpse of the new series on Playboy.com.
The series picks up nine years after events in Palahniuk’s 1996 novel. The self-medicating narrator now goes by the name “Sebastian,” is married to Marla Singer and has a young son with her.
Also Read: ‘Fight Club 2′ Coming to Comics Courtesy of Book’s.
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It may have bombed in the box office to the point where Universal and Legendary aren’t releasing the movie theatrically in Australia (the home country of its main star), but it’s arrived in the UK. So, what did we make of Michael Mann’s Blackhat?

Luke Owen and Rohan Morbey give their thoughts on the movie and where it falls in the Michael Mann back catalogue. Will Rohan’s love of Michael Mann cloud his judgement?

You can subscribe to the Flickering Myth Podcast via iTunes, update your RSS feed or listen via Sitcher or using the player below…

And don’t forget to check out past episodes via the Flickering Myth Pocast website or use the player below:

Have any thoughts on the Flickering Myth Podcast? Let us know in the comments section below or email luke@flickeringmyth.com.

In these Banshee reviews, I generally try to approach the series from a more literary perspective. This writing staff, led by novelist/co-creator Jonathan Tropper, has a great sense of genre and how to highlight certain themes that can resonate well for viewers so far removed from the kind of life that Banshee presents its characters. But “You Can’t Hide from the Dead” demands me to take a step back. Though I have some experience with screenwriting, I have none whatsoever when it comes to other aspects of filmmaking. When I see something like Children of Men or Birdman or Boyhood, I mostly just sit back and say “Wooowww…” That said, I’ll have to do my best here with what
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A Fight Club board game sounds pretty awesome, and while there isn’t a real one (yet?) we’ve got a board designed to promote Fight Club 2, the comic book sequel written by original creator Chuck Palahniuk and illustrated by Cameron Stewart. That sequel is coming in May, and you can also preview the first issue right now. The first six pages […]

The post See a ‘Fight Club’ Board Game Design; Read the First Pages of ‘Fight Club 2′ appeared first on /Film.
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More than 15 years after Fight Club hit theaters in the fall of 1999, fans will finally get to learn more about what happened to Tyler Durden in the Fight Club 2 graphic novel. Playboy has released the first six pages of the comic, which was created by original Fight Club author Chuck Palahniuk and illustrated by Cameron Stewart. The series will be previewed in a free issue during Comic Book Store Day on May 2 before the Dark Horse Comics title debuts on May 27.

Some imaginary friends never go away... Ten years after starting Project Mayhem, he lives a mundane life. A kid, a wife, pills to keep his destiny at bay. But it won't last long; the wife has seen to that. The time has come... Rize or Die. Along with the first six pages, we also have a handy "guide for emergency landing," designed as an in-flight instruction guide that helps
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Last week we got our first look at writer Chuck Palahniuk’s upcoming comic book sequel to his 1996 novel Fight Club, and now Rolling Stone has posted some additional artwork, which you can see here…

According to the site, “Fight Club 2 picks up a decade after the events of the first book, and finds the anonymous narrator married to Marla Singer and struggling to be a good father to his nine-year-old son. Tyler Durden will, of course, also return, and Palahniuk hinted at an exploration of the character’s true origins, suggesting he’s much more than an ‘aberration that’s popped into [the narrator’s] mind.'”

The ten-issue miniseries will get underway in May, from Dark Horse Comics.

Fans of author Chuck Palahniuk do not have too many cinematic adaptations of his books to enjoy. We have Fight Club from David Fincher which has become a modern classic as well as Clark Gregg's Choke. With a dozen other novels teased as potential films for years now, we can turn our attention to the sequel to Fight Club which will soon be available in comic book format.
The kind folks over at Playboy have found the time in between naked photo shoots to publish the occasional piece
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The first rule of Fight Club is that you don’t talk about Fight Club. The second rule of Fight Club is that you don’t talk about Fight Club. Which doesn’t really make a whole lot of sense when you think about it, given that Fight Club is a movie that absolutely everybody should be talking about at every available opportunity: it’s pretty much a modern masterpiece.

Indeed, David Fincher’s brilliantly slick, clinical and biting adaptation of the novel of the same name is continually poised as as one of those timeless movies that – at one point or another – everybody with even a passing interest in cinema has considered as one of their favourite movies ever. After all, it’s certainly one of the coolest films ever made.

Now, of course, Fight Club has penetrated the mainstream culture to such a degree that
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A few weeks ago, while working on my review of the “Parks and Recreation” episode “Save Jj’s,” I asked people on Twitter for the name of one of the show’s weirder recurring characters, the creepy, heavily-tattooed owner of Pawnee’s pawn shop. My followers identified him as Herman Lerpiss — and, better, pointed out that there have been a lot of characters named Lerpiss in Pawnee over the years, often with far more elaborate biographies than has ever been suggested on the show itself.
This made me realize that, while I have interviewed “Parks” co-creator Mike Schur many times over the years about major developments for Leslie, Ron, April, Andy, and the rest of the show’s main characters (you can read some of those interviews here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here , here and here), I’d barely scratched the surface of all the crazy background characters
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John Wick has come to VOD and home video, and if you haven’t seen it, you really fucking should, seriously. Not since films like Equilibrium or A Better Tomorrow have I seen innovative “gun fu” executed onscreen with such passionate detail, and I’ll bet, neither have you. If I am preaching to the choir, you may feel free to get off here, if not then bear with me for a moment.

Before I go any further I should note that what prompted me to go on this tangent is that I’m truly tired of seeing entertaining movies going unnoticed due to weak marketing; that and I had asked almost all of my die hard action fan friends if they had seen John Wick and they either had not seen it or was otherwise unsure of which movie I was referring to.

Sunday’s episode of Where in the World Is Edith Crawley? Downton Abbey featured two engagements, a (brief) reunion of lovers and, sadly, the beginning of the end for a cherished — albeit ill-named — member of the Crawley family.

First thing’s first: Thanks to a blunt tip from Mrs. Drewe, who remains the biggest victim in this whole ordeal, Cora was made aware of Edith’s secret and became more determined than ever to find her. Robert, however, remained in the dark because, while it was Cora’s right as Edith’s mother to know the truth,
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Birdman or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance is a black comedy that tells the story of an actor (Michael Keaton) – famous for portraying an iconic superhero – as he struggles to mount a Broadway play.
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Downton Abbey‘s very own Meg Griffin on Sunday learned that, as previously suspected, Michael Gregson had been killed by members of Hitler’s growing regime, leaving poor little Marigold fatherless after all. So she did what any woman who just inherited a publishing company from her deceased baby daddy would do: She hauled ass to the nearby farm, revealed to the kindly woman that the child she’d been caring for is actually hers, then snatched the
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The film, which has garnered nine Academy Award nominations including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Actor, was included in hundreds of top 10 lists across the globe for 2014 (including Flickering Myth’s own list), and has already won multiple awards through the awards season over the last few months.

A self-declared film buff, the former president has most recently endorsed the Netflix documentary Virunga and Ava DuVernay’s Selma.

According to a 2014 study by The Wall Street Journal, NBC News and the Annenberg Public Policy Center, an endorsement from Clinton makes political candidates appear to be 38 percent more favorable among voters. But does this effect carry over to his movie choices?

Some think yes and other think no, but regardless of the effects, Clinton has offered his praise for many films throughout the year.

Clinton made a surprise appearance at the New York Museum of Arts and Design’s Virunga screening on Jan. 31, along with his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The documentary, executive produced by Leonardo DiCaprio, follows a team of park rangers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Virunga National Park as
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